Identifying the MDA for Optimized Site Pages |  | Visited: 1056 |
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| | by Frederick Townes November 28, 2006 |
You have designed, built and launched a web site
for a reason. That reason is to persuade site visitors to perform the
MDA – the most desired action as you, the site owner, see it.
MDAs
can be obvious or very subtle. For example, the MDA on a commercial
site is to induce visitors to buy something. That’s obvious. Other
MDAs include providing an email address, providing additional
personal information, opening an account, signing up for a service,
asking for a quote or opting in for the monthly newsletter.
Less
obvious MDAs include submitting a blog entry, starting a forum
thread, referring new visitors, book marking the site or reading
critical sales or informational copy. You could also include coming
back again as an MDA for almost every site. That repeat traffic is
valuable in building your online enterprise.
Identifying
the MDA
Before
visitors can perform any MDA, you have to determine what the
MDA is for each page of your site. And though that may sound
like a simple task, it’s not.
Multiple MDAs
Multiple
MDAs can cause problems if not presented properly. It’s difficult
to persuade visitors to perform one task much less two or
three. There are several reasons for this.
Visitors
aren’t very patient. They want to determine if your site is what
they’re looking for, they want to conduct their business and move
on to Mah Jong solitaire. Asking a visitor to complete a customer
satisfaction survey after a sale is like asking visitors to take
their SATs again. Not very likely.
Ambiguous MDAs
You
see this quite often on NFP sites and sites designed to provide
informational content. For many of these sites, the MDA is to have
the visitor make a donation. However, on the same page viewers may be
offered the opportunity to become a member, to receive regular
updates or to be bombarded with affiliate spam. (Can we send you
useful information from time to time?)
More
than one MDA per page will deter many visitors from performing any
actions. Too confusing. Too much time.
Linear MDAs
A
common aspect of many service providers’ web pages, linear
MDAs require visitors to perform more than one action in a series.
For
example, the first MDA for a site selling debt consolidation services
might be to motivate visitors to click on a link from the home page
that will take them to a form to be completed in order to access the
debt consolidation services. In cases of linear MDAs, each page of
the site must clearly state the MDA for that page.
Continuing
to use the example of the debt consolidation company, if the MDA is
to click a link to a form, the link itself would appear on the home
page. It would be very large and well labeled, i.e. Click here to get
started. The home page copy would be directed specifically to the
MDA. Urge and persuade the visitor to click on that link.
The
next MDA, completing the form, would be addressed on the link from
the home page. In fact, there are usually several (many) MDAs for a
single site and each page of the site must specifically address the
MDA for that particular page.
No MDAs
More
commonly found on personal sites and owner-designed commercial sites,
the lack of a clearly stated MDA will leave many visitors scratching
their heads and wondering just what they’re expected to do. Not
only should you have a clear picture of the single-most
important MDA for your site, you should make sure your visitors know
just what that MDA is, as well.
Optimizing
the Homepage for Maximum MDA Conversion
A
site’s conversion rate is nothing more than the rate at which
visitors perform the MDA. If one in 10 performs the MDA the
conversion rate is 10%. If only one in 100 performs the most desired
action, the site’s conversion rate is 1%.
The
site’s homepage is the first place to clearly introduce and
identify the MDA to the visitor. The MDA call-out should appear on
the home page above the fold. It should be the first thing visitors
see without scrolling. For example:
Welcome
to Nutty Nick’s Wicker Hut
20%
Off Everything You Buy
That
header identifies the MDA – buy some wicker from Nutty Nick. Here’s
another headline that defines an MDA. What do you think the action is
here:
Sign
up for our FREE newsletter and
you
may win a free trip to Bermuda!!!
Obviously,
the headline is intended to persuade visitors to opt in for a
newsletter. It’s clear, unambiguous and it offers an incentive
for completing the action.
MDA
Incentives
“Why
should I?” and “What’s in it for me?” are two questions many
visitors ask when the MDA offers no clear benefit to them. That’s
why incentives are useful in many cases.
What
kind of incentives? Well, anything FREE is always good. Free shipping
and handling, a free extended service warranty, free (and really
useful) information, the chance to win something – there are plenty
of incentives you can employ to encourage completion of the MDA.
Just
make sure that the incentive and the MDA are closely tied and closely
positioned as in the example above. The incentive doesn’t have to
be expensive but it should deliver clear benefit to the visitor.
Also,
when more than one MDA is the goal, limit the number of calls to
perform an action to exactly one on the home page. Other, less
critical actions can be introduced on landing pages, aka zone pages,
within a site.
Optimizing
Zone Pages for the MDA
Once
visitors have navigated the home page (and performed the MDA), they
next click a link that takes them to a zone page or landing page
(same thing). Once again, the MDA should be clearly displayed above
the fold on each zone page.
Zone
pages serve different purposes. A link off the home page to a
description of company services looks and sounds very different from
the zone page for the check-out or contact us page. In all cases,
visitors must recognize the personal benefit to them when they choose
to perform the action for that specific page. They will save money.
They will receive something useful. They will find a solution to a
specific problem. Any discriminating visitor is going to ask, “How
does this help me?” Provide the right answer and you convert.
Provide the wrong answer, or no answer, and that visitor is a click
away from gone.
That’s
why every site owner must consider the MDA for each page of a site.
MDAs must also be specifically targeted on individual pages within
the web site. Directions for performing the MDA must be clear,
unambiguous and persuasive. Finally, on every page of your site, the
visitor must see the clear benefit of performing the MDA – even if
the most desired action is clicking on the link back to the home
page. Clear, straightforward and persuasive.
If
you don’t have a clear understanding of the MDAs for the
pages of your site, neither will your visitors. So, if your
conversion rate isn’t where you’d like it to be, develop text for
MDAs and optimize every page of your site.
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